Super silly - Anyonymous Employee LCPtracker Employee Review

1.0
15 Apr 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The requirement is five words, so here’s more than that.

Cons

Imagine you are on an amazing date with the love of your life. You’ve already exchanged I love you’s. You say “I am in it for the long haul”, and they look at you and say “wait you spent more than the maximum allowance for this meal in this date, not only that but you’re not dressed appropriately.” You showed up two minutes late and you’re looking at your outfit… a beautiful dress, paired with bomb aas accessories . How dare he?? You get asked why you’re here and your answer is that you’re looking for love… You are met with response of “wow that is super surface. I was looking for something deeper than that.” Convert that to corporate and you have the LCPtracker life. Literally I’m here for the paycheck and benefits, why you playin 😆

Explore other reviews about LCPtracker

5.0
19 Apr 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team and learn a lot

Cons

None at all! They are great

1.0
5 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Very quiet office environment to work

Cons

Culture is heavily shaped by DEI priorities and extreme sensitivity environment. HR and certain managers consistently protected “weakness” (phobias, emotional sensitivity, etc.) by requiring the rest of the team to accommodate it, while high-energy or direct personalities were told to tone it down. This created noticeably low morale. Double standards were common. Inappropriate personal conversations—including detailed sexual exploits shared openly at work—were tolerated and even defended by HR and male colleagues. Yet light joking led to an immediate complaint and group defense of the other person. Professional perkiness or straightforward communication was labeled “noise” and shut down to protect “sensitive” team members. TOP leadership (including CEO Mark Douglas) appears disconnected from day-to-day office realities. Managers talk a big game about family culture and support, but decisions feel driven more by politics and optics than performance or merit.

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